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Classic movie hoarder and proud old-Hollywood fan. Curating my personal watchlist since forever. DM for opinions!
18th-century Paris decadence, intricate fashion—Glenn Close owns every scene.
Old-money New York and extravagant gowns—think Downton Abbey but even glitzier.
Victorian rural life with some of the best period costumes in modern film.
Turn-of-the-century Paris gets the full Technicolor spectacle treatment. Iconic looks throughout.
Edwardian fashion bliss. Floats between opulent parties and crisp uniforms.
Old Hollywood at its showiest—iconic gowns, hoop skirts, and unforgettable drama.
Meticulous, stylized period pieces meet eccentric uniforms and classic silhouettes. Vintage heaven.
That green dress. Enough said. Glamour, heartbreak, and sweeping 1930s visuals.
Sumptuous pastels, sparkling gowns, and a dreamy pop twist. Pure eye candy for vintage fashion fans.
Lush Gilded Age elegance—Winona Ryder and Daniel Day-Lewis shine in every embroidered frame.
Classic screwball energy. Clark Gable and Claudette Colbert make rom-com history.
Bergman's psychological masterpiece—minimalist and mesmerizing visuals. Essential.
Understated heartbreak set to stirring visuals. Essential British romance.
Hitchcock’s most elegant noir. Sizzling chemistry and suspense in every frame.
Peerless cinematography and storytelling. A must-watch for any monochrome connoisseur.
Serling’s twisty anthology—moody, imaginative, and visually unforgettable.
Katherine Hepburn, Cary Grant, and Jimmy Stewart in a sparkling society comedy.
The stuff dreams are made of. Essential noir with a perfect Bogart performance.
Dark Hollywood glamour and sharp storytelling. Wilder’s biting take on fame.
Hitchcock at his most daring. Still the gold standard for suspense in black and white.
Billy Wilder’s noir masterpiece—sharp dialogue, shadows, and fatal attraction.
An unforgettable love story set against the backdrop of WWII. A pure classic.
Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant shine. Spirited, bright, endlessly watchable.
Cary Grant and Irene Dunne’s screwball energy is irresistible. Divorce never looked so fun.
Groundbreaking, endlessly funny, and Lucille Ball’s comedic genius shines in every episode.
Rapid-fire dialogue, newsroom shenanigans, and Rosalind Russell stealing every scene.
Darkly comedic with zany antics. Cary Grant delivers perfect physical comedy.
Effortless humor and sharp dialogue. Hepburn, Grant, and Stewart at their finest.
Classic screwball chaos with Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Irresistible, witty, and wild.
Wilder’s fast-talking farce blends mistaken identities and romance in a flawless screwball package.
British neo-noir TV at its finest—surreal style, moody mysteries, and musical numbers.
A gritty, semi-documentary style noir set on the streets of New York. Realism meets suspense.
London’s shadows never looked more thrilling. Desperation and doom, brilliantly filmed.
Joan Crawford at her best in this gripping tale of ambition, heartbreak, and noir glamour.
Taut adaptation of Hemingway’s story—moody lighting, fatalism, and a young Burt Lancaster.
Duality, obsession, and twisted fates—classic Hitchcock with razor-sharp noir style.
A tense, realistic heist film that defined the genre. Gritty, suspenseful perfection.
Rita Hayworth’s iconic turn lights up this sleek and sultry noir. Smoldering and unforgettable.
Classic Hitchcock tension, stylish espionage, and standout performances from Ingrid Bergman and Cary Grant.
Bogart is unforgettable in this haunting noir about love and suspicion. Essential viewing for atmosphere alone.
Vienna shadows, haunting zither, and Orson Welles’ unforgettable entrance.
Bogart playing classic hard-boiled detective. Iconic from start to finish.
Wilder at his sharpest. The blueprint for noir atmosphere and femme fatales.